About Lucía Rodríguez

As the Director of the Lemur Conservation Network, Lucía Rodriguez will continue positioning the LCN brand and will promote lemur conservation nationally and to the international audience through design, education, training, sharing information and communications. She is responsible for the overall communications and in particular operates the website, creates social media messaging on Facebook, and creates educational materials and learning activities for the LCN website, to be used in zoos, like-minded organizations, schools classrooms and public in general. Lucía curates information for the site and liaises with organizations and individuals interested in participating in the program. She also writes blog articles on local and worldwide lemur conservation education efforts for LCN website and social media.
Lucía is a Costa Rican conservationist specialized on psychology passionate about nature conservation and social development and human wellbeing. She has experience working in several different conservation and social initiatives in Costa Rica as well with projects for lemur conservation in Madagascar and working for the past year as a volunteer at the Lemur Conservation Network. She is truly motivated and ready to use her passion for lemur education to encourage more awareness and action among the general public, and in the conservation education field.

Author Archive | Lucía Rodríguez

Hello again lemur fans, In this blog I would like to talk about the Endangered Crowned Sifaka. This specie of Sifaka are easily recognisable by their creamy white body, golden brown chests and black crown of fur. They spend most of their time eating and resting, depending on the season and they like to spend time in the very tops of trees. They usually come down to the ground to move between larger clearings to get to other areas of […]

Learn about the Member of the Month for March 2019: the Aspinall Foundation. Aspinall’s work in Madagascar supports 6 species of lemur including the indri and crowned sifaka through community-based conservation, research, and education.

Welcome! Hello fellow Lemur fans. I’ve been looking into areas where I can help, so here I am. This is my first time blogging so here we go. I’m Liam, a volunteer at the Cotswold Wildlife Park & Gardens. Many of you may not have heard of this park and but it’s an amazing park, located by the sleepy Cotswold town of Burford, England. My Work as a Volunteer My day begins by reporting to the primate keepers during their […]

LCN member of February 2019 is Madagascar Wildlife Conservation (MWC). Learn about their work in the Alaotra Region, Madagascar, which uses education, ecotourism, and research to protect lemur habitat.

Ring-tailed lemurs are one of Madagascar’s most iconic species, easily recognised by their distinctive black and white striped tails. With 3,500 ring-tailed lemurs living in zoos across the world, it could be fair to suggest that these lemurs have become a significant global image for conservation in Madagascar. Earlier in the year, I was lucky enough to spend a week gaining work experience at a Safari park. The park’s troop of lemurs, including playful ring-tailed lemurs, white-fronted brown lemurs, & […]

Ala is an innovative reforestation project strives to protect the future of lemur populations in south east Madagascar. About SEED Madagascar Operating in the Anosy region of southeast Madagascar, charity SEED Madagascar has been dedicated to improving human and ecological communities through development projects since 2000. Complimenting this, SEED also has an array of environmental initiatives which not only mitigate human impact on fragile habitats but consider the people that depend on these natural resources for daily needs. Threats to […]

Why did GERP organize a large event such as this event for the World Lemur Festival (WLF)? The World Lemur Festival began in 2014, currently we are at the 5th edition of the WLF. At GERP, we are convinced that the awareness to Malagasy people of lemur conservation is a priority and it needs to be strengthened. For many reasons: First, we know that forests areas are more and more in decline in Madagascar and lemurs live in the forests. […]

Tell us a little bit about the history of Wildlife Conservation Society Wildlife Conservation Society, an American organization, is an internationally recognized organization dedicated to the conservation of terrestrial and marine biodiversity as well as landscapes. Since its launch in 1993, the WCS Madagascar Program works throughout Madagascar to ensure the long-term conservation of the country’s unique biological diversity with a focus on activities in priority landscape/seascapes. WCS has been engaged in Makira since 2003 and led the creation […]

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Blog posts are the opinions of each author, and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Lemur Conservation Network. Photos are credited to the photographer listed and cannot be used elsewhere without permission. All organizations listed on the Lemur Conservation Network have agreed to be included on this website. Each organization retains its own liability for the accuracy of their statements on the Lemur Conservation Network.